Thursday, October 25, 2012

July 14-16 - Kenai Peninsula, Homer

A common sight in Alaska, this moose was expertly pointed out by Alan

The evening of the return from our
glacier cruise out of Seward found us headed for Homer, a couple hundred miles
away on the other side of the Kenai Peninsula. Since the sun sets so late here,
only being dark for 3-4 hours in the middle of the night, we were still driving
in daylight even though we were on the road until 11:30 at night.

We stopped a couple places en
route, at a supermarket for some sandwich materials and then at the Kenai NWR
headquarters for the range-restricted Aleutian Tern, a breeding species there.
We were able to pick out one of the terns feeding over the lake just behind the
headquarters buildings, the first time I have seen a species of tern for the
first time after 10pm!

Eventually we arrived at our
destination for the night – a random road in the hills above Homer, where we
ate sandwiches on the hood of the car, which we then proceeded to sleep in. For
those of you out there who look down on sleeping in cars, our ride was quite a
comfy sleeping place in my opinion!

View over the town of Homer from near where we slept

The following morning we checked a
bunch of local areas in the downtown Homer area, and then spent the afternoon
at nearby Anchor Point, a little coastal promontory that turned out to be great
for seawatching. It was also a popular place for fishing, and the large number
of fishermen there would fillet their catch and toss the carcasses into the
surf edge, which served to attract lots of gulls, crows, and eagles.

This immature Bald Eagle was along the docks on Homer Spit, a peninsula right in downtown Homer

The eagle show was spectacular,
with about 20 individuals feeding along the coastline, flying along at eye
level less than 30 feet away at times. The congregation of close to a thousand
gulls featured a Slaty-backed Gull mixed in with the myriad Glaucous-winged
Gulls – this Slaty-backed that we found being the only one in the entire US at
that time apart from one other elsewhere in Alaska!

Slaty-backed Gull (left), standing out among the surrounding Glaucous-winged Gulls

Adult Bald Eagle dropping down onto a fish carcass

Landing gear down!

This eagle came and landed in a tree right next to us, this photo is not cropped at all!

That evening we went and searched
for Boreal Owl in the wood above town, unfortunately without any form of
success. While thinking about our plans for the next couple days, we realized
that we had gotten pretty much all of our realistic targets for the areas that
we had been to, and that we could make it back a day earlier than planned, thus
saving money on the rental car. However, this meant that we had to make it back
for 1pm the following day..

4am found us awake in the front
seats of the car again, having slept for another night in our luxurious sedan.
After checking in vain one last time for Boreal Owl, we started the six-hour
drive back to Anchorage, planning on one last birding stop.

We reached the town of Hope a few
hours later, and headed up to a nice dirt road that climbed through a valley
above town. Here we were able to add some more species that we hadn’t encountered
yet this trip, such as Spruce Grouse, Olive-sided Flycatcher, and many other
species with boreal flair.

View from the side of the road as we left the Kenai Peninsula

After here we went back to
Anchorage for our last few days, hiking around town a couple times and enjoying
the remainder of our time in Alaska, before flying home without mishap. I’ll
post once more about this trip as a recap of the work that we did and things we
saw.